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“Decreased duration of mechanical ventilation when comparing analgesia-
based sedation using remifentanil with standard hypnotic-based sedation
for up to 10 days in intensive care unit patients: a randomised tria l”


                                                   Dr Peter Sherren
Analgesia
   Blunting or absence of sensation of pain or noxious stimuli


Sedation
   Complex neurophysiologic condition
     • Anxiolysis
     • Hypnosis (minimal motor activity; physically similar to sleep)
     • Amnesia



   Needs for sedation vary widely
   Target level: Sedation scoring
•   Riker Sedation-Agitation Scale (SAS)

•   Motor Activity Assessment Scale (MAAS)

•   Ramsay Scale

•   Homerton’s own
•   Self Reporting- Gold standard

•   Numerical Rating Scale (NRS)

•   Behavioural Pain Scale (BPS)
Item                                         Description             Score

Facial expression                              Relaxed                                     1

                                               Partially tightened                         2

                                               Fully tightened                             3

                                               Grimacing                                   4

Upper limbs                                    No movement                                 1

                                               Partially bent                              2

                                               Fully bent with finger flexion              3

                                               Permanently retracted                       4

Compliance with ventilation                    Tolerating movement                         1
                                               Coughing but tolerating ventilation for
                                               most of the time                            2

                                               Fighting ventilator                         3

                                               Unable to control ventilation               4

Source: Ahlers et al. Critical Care 2008 12:R15 doi:10.1186/cc6789
   Anxiety
     • Fear, apprehension
     • Multi-factorial: inability to communicate, continuous lightingand stimulation, sleep
         deprivation, fight or flight.
   Agitation
     • Physiological disturbance (Hypoxemia/tension/glycaemia, Biochemical, Pyrexia,
       Bacteraemia etc)
     • Multi-factorial: pain, withdrawal, delirium, adverse drug effects, extreme anxiety

   Pain
     • ITU environment (Sleeplessness, tubes, lack of control and autonomy, lack of information,
       immobilisation, dressings etc)
     • Underlying Pathology
     • Trauma and surgical procedures (major and minor)
     • Cytokine Overload (TNF, IL-1/6/8 +++)

   To allow ITU intervention and expedite care
Causes/consequences of an
inadequate analgesia/sedation
•   The time for the drug concentration to decrease
    a set percentage varies according to the duration
    of infusion

•   “Context-sensitive half-time” is the time taken for
    the plasma concentration to decrease by 50%,
    following an infusion, of a given duration.

•   A 50% reduction is necessary for recovery
    from most IV anesthetics
   Phenanthrene, Vd 3.5, T1/2 180 min
   Pharmacologic effects of δ/μ/κ-receptor agonists
     Analgesia, respiratory depression, GI effects, orthostatic
      hypotension, sedation and altered mentation
   Metabolism
    • Glucuronide conjugation; active metabolite, morphine-6-
      glucoronide (5-10%) and renally eliminated
    • Prolonged effects in renal/hepatic failure

   Adverse effects
    • Histamine release (allergic rxns, hypotension)
    • N&V, Pruritis
   Synthetic anilino-piperidine opoid-like agonist
    • Vd 4, T ½ β 350min
    • 100x more potent than morphine, μ agonist
    • Lipophilic 580x morphine: rapid (lipophilic)
   CV stable
    • No histamine release, no hypotension
    • Bradycardia
   Metabolism
    • No active metabolites, dealkylation to nor fentanyl-> hydroxylation ->
      Excreted renally
    • Clearance affected by age, obesity, plasma protein content, liver
      disease, renal insufficiency
    • 2+ compartment model pharmacokinetics, context sensitive T ½, both
      an α and β T ½, plasma 13 min, Terminal 350 min
   Anilo-piperidine analogue of fentanyl
    • 20x potency of morphine, μ agonis
    • Onset 90 seconds due to pKa
    • Vd 0.8, pKa 6.5, Plasma T ½ 13, terminal T ½ 90 min
   Pharmacological effects
    • Hypotension, bradycardia and obtunds hypertensive response to
      laryngoscopy
    • Chest wall rigidity
    • Minimal histamine release
   Metabolism
    • Hepatic N dealkylation to noralfentanil, inactive metabolite
    • Virtually no accumulation or prolonged terminal half life due to lower
      lipid solubility
   Synthetic anilino-piperidine opoid without methyl ester
    linkage
    • Potent μ agonist, 100x morphine
    • 50x relative lipid solubility to morphine, rapid onset/offset
    • Vd 0.35, T ½ 15 min

   Similar effect to alfentanil
   Metabolism
    • independent of hepatic and renal function
    • de-esterification by non specific plasma and tissue esterases to
      inactive metabolites
   Optimal analgesia to alleviate anxiety and distress
   Need to improve weaning/extubation times
   Time on ITU
   Adverse Events
   Sedative requirements
   Ideal analgesic agent
   Does not negate good ITU practice, sedation breaks
    etc. Simply an adjunct to best practice.
   Citation
    Breen D, Karabinis A, Malbrain M, Morais R, Albrecht S, Jarnvig I-L, Parkinson P, Kirkham AJT:
    Decreased time on mechanical ventilation when comparing analgesia-based sedation
    using remifen-tanil versus standard hypnotic-based sedation for up to 10 days in ICU
    patients: a randomised trial. [ISRCTN47583497].
    Crit Care 2005, 9:R200-R210

   Background
    Sedation and analgesia on the ITU is a complex balancing act. At all times trying to
    ensure optimal patient comfort in a group that have a variety of problems and
    organ dysfunction as well as often quite protracted length of stay. All of which in
    combination with the various drug interactions can alter the pharmacological effect
    of all our therapies. Remifentanil in some respects ticks most of the boxes of an
    ideal opioid, bar cost. Its use on the ITU seems to have a great deal of potential.
   Objective
    This study aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of a prolonged infusion
    of remifentanil in critically ill patients for up to 10 days in comparison
    with a standard sedative regime of midazolam plus a traditional opioid.
   Design
    This study was a randomised, open-label, multicentre, parallel-group.
   Setting
    10 countries and 15 medical centres.
   Subjects
    Patients requiring long-term mechanical ventilation for medical reasons.
    Post-op patients requiring extended mechanical ventilation as a result of
    post-surgical complications were also included. Patients were eligible if
    they were more than 18 years old, had been admitted to the intensive care
    unit (ICU) within the previous 30 hours, were expected to require
    mechanical ventilation for longer than 96 hours and required analgesia
    and sedation.
   Exclusion Criteria
    • Pregnant females
    • Patients with condition preventing sedation assessment
    • If likely to require tracheostomy/surgery during treatment
    • If NMJ blocking agents required by infusion
    • Epidural analgesia
    • Anaesthetic agents beyond the specified
    • Sensitivity to any of the specified drugs
    • History of alcohol or drug abuse

   Intervention
    • 105 patients were randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive either a
      remifentanil-based regime or a comparator hypnotic-based regime
      using midazolam with either morphine or fentanyl for analgesia.
   Study End points
    • The primary endpoint was the time from the start of study drug to
      extubation. Secondary endpoints were the time from start of study
      drug until start of weaning, the time from start of weaning until
      extubation, the time from start of study drug to ICU discharge.
    • The safety endpoints were the offset of pharmacodynamic effects of
      study drugs after permanent discontinuation, haemodynamic effects,
      clinical adverse events and the requirement for re-intubation.
    • Serious adverse events were defined as adverse events that resulted
      in any of the following outcomes: death, life-threatening event,
      prolongation of hospitalisation, or a disability or incapacity.
   Statistics
    • The time to event endpoints were analysed with the generalised
      Wilcoxon test with a two-sided α level of 5% judged to indicate a
      statistically significant difference between the treatment groups.
Characteristic                            Remifentanil                               Comparator
Number of patients treated                57                                         48

Medical (%)/post-surgical (%)             49 (88)/7 (13)                             44 (92)/4 (8)

Emergency (%)/elective (%)                27 (84)/5 (16), n = 32                     21 (91)/2 (9), n = 23
Age (years)                               52.2 ± 18.4                                57.3 ± 18.1
Male (%)/female (%)                       39 (68)/18 (32)                            32 (67)/16 (33)
Height (cm)                               171.2 ± 9.7                                169.0 ± 7.9
Weight (kg)                               78.6 ± 13.41                               76.3 ± 15.50
SAPS II on admission                      43.0 ± 15.6                                43.3 ± 11.2
MAP (mmHg)a                               88.8 ± 16.5                                88.9 ± 14.8
Heart rate (b.p.m.)a                      98.9 ± 20.1                                95.9 ± 15.5
SAS scorea                                3.3 ± 1.3                                  3.3 ± 1.4
PI scorea                                 2.0 ± 1.2                                  2.1 ± 1.1
aBaseline values. Where errors are given, results are means± SD. MAP, mean arterial pressure; PI, pain intensity; SAS,
Sedation–Agitation Scale.
Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210.
Remifentanil (n =
Characteristic                   57)                          Comparator (n = 48)   P
Number (%) of patients
                                 29 (51%)                     16 (33%)
extubated
Time from start of study
                                 83.0                         98.0                  0.523
drugs to weaning (h)

 Difference (95% CI)             -15.0 (-61.8 to 31.8)

Time from start of study
                                 94.0                         147.5                 0.033
drugs to extubation(h)

 Difference (95% CI)             -53.5 (-111.4 to 4.4)

Time from weaning time
                                 0.9                          27.5                  <0.001
until extubation (h)

 Difference (95% CI)             -26.6 (-40.8 to -12.4)

Time from start of study
drugs until ICU discharge        187.3                        209.8                 0.326
(h)

 Difference (95% CI)             -22.5 (-201.5 to 156.5)
Point estimates are 75th centiles. CI, confidence interval.
Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
Kaplan–Meier survival plot of time to
                      extubation (days)




Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
Median time to offset of effects as measured
    by the time to therapeutic intervention




    Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
Mean total midazolam dose




Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
   Matching
    • The two treatment groups were well matched in terms of patient characteristics
      and baseline clinical assessments.
   Efficacy
    • Fewer than 50% of patients were extubated during the 10-day treatment period
      (45 of 105). There was no difference in the time to the start of the weaning
      process. There was a statistical and clinically significant difference between the
      two groups in the study's primary endpoint of time of starting the drug to
      extubation. A Kaplan–Meier plot analysing the duration of mechanical
      ventilation, the time difference was 53.5 hours, being shorter in the remifentanil
      group (P = 0.033). The time from the start of the weaning process to extubation
      was also significantly different at 26.6 hours, also in favour of remifentanil (P <
      0.001).
    • The median percentage time of optimal analgesia/sedation was comparable for
      both groups (remifentanil 96.9%, comparator 97.8%, median difference -0.3,
      95% confidence interval -2.7 to 0.2; P = 0.16).
   Safety
    • Comparable
   Exposure to Study drugs
    • Of the patients treated with remifentanil, 26% (15 of 57) did not receive any
      midazolam during the study. There was nearly a ninefold difference in mean
      total midazolam requirements in the fentanyl group compared with the
      remifentanil group, and a fourfold difference in the morphine group compared
      with the remifentanil group.
   Analgesia-based sedation with remifentanil was well
    tolerated; it reduces the duration of mechanical ventilation
    and improves the weaning process compared with standard
    hypnotic-based sedation regimes in ICU patients requiring
    long-term ventilation for up to 10 days.

   Reminfentanil is sedative sparing and has a very rapid offset
    even after a 10-day infusion, with no evidence of
    accumulation.

   The adverse event profile was similar in remifentanil-based
    and other hypnotic-based regimes.
   One particular concern was that the titration of remifentanil was based on
    a fixed protocol, but the titration of the comparator benzodiazepine
    infusion was not.

   There was no statistical difference in the time from start of study drug to
    the beginning of the weaning process, however, this process was begun in
    the remifentanil group an average of 15 hours earlier.


   The authors do mention that the sedation levels were matched in both
    groups, during treatment and in the post-treatment period, and that the
    differences were due to the drug per se and not the level of sedation. In
    an unblinded trial, if no reason for the delay is offered, the potential for
    bias is there.

   Competing interest with funding from GSK to some of the centres
    involved.
   The technique of using remifentanil as the primary sedative
    and analgesic, with the addition of traditional sedatives such
    as propofol or midazolam only if necessary, has been
    studied in ICU patients for up to 3 days (1,2,3) and in
    neurosurgical patients studied for up to 5 days, with good
    results (4).
   The end of Fentanyl infusions?

   Clearly a rigorous double blinded RCT is needed.

   Of particular interest is in the cost/benefit ratio of alfentanil
    vs remifentanil, as pharmacokinetically alfentanil and
    remifentanil demonstrate similar profiles.
1.   Breen, D; Wilmer, A; Bodenham, A; Bach, V; Bonde, J; Kessler, P; Albrecht, S; Shaikh, S. Offset of
     pharmacodynamic effects and safety of remifentanil in intensive care unit patients with various
     degrees of renal impairment. Crit Care. 2004;8:R21–R30. doi: 10.1186/cc2399.

2.   Muellejans, B; Lopez, A; Cross, MH; Bonome, C; Morrison, L; Kirkham, AJT. Remifentanil versus
     fentanyl for analgesia based sedation to provide patient comfort in the intensive care unit: a
     randomised control trial [ISRCTN43755713]. Crit Care. 2004;8:R1–R11. doi: 10.1186/cc2398

3.   Dahaba, AA; Grabner, T; Rehak, PH; List, WF; Metzler, H. Remifentanil versus morphine
     analgesia and sedation for mechanically ventilated critically ill patients: a randomised double
     blind study. Anesthesiology. 2004;101:640–646. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200409000-00012

4.   Karabinis, A; Mandragos, K; Stergiopoulos, S; Komnos, A; Soukup, J; Speelberg, B; Kirkham,
     AJT. Safety and efficacy of analgesia-based sedation using remifentanil versus standard
     hypnotic-based regimens in intensive care unit patients with brain injuries: a randomised,
     controlled trial [ISRCTN50308308]. Crit Care. 2004;8:R268–R280. doi: 10.1186/cc2896.

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ICU analgesia

  • 1. “Decreased duration of mechanical ventilation when comparing analgesia- based sedation using remifentanil with standard hypnotic-based sedation for up to 10 days in intensive care unit patients: a randomised tria l” Dr Peter Sherren
  • 2. Analgesia  Blunting or absence of sensation of pain or noxious stimuli Sedation  Complex neurophysiologic condition • Anxiolysis • Hypnosis (minimal motor activity; physically similar to sleep) • Amnesia  Needs for sedation vary widely  Target level: Sedation scoring
  • 3. Riker Sedation-Agitation Scale (SAS) • Motor Activity Assessment Scale (MAAS) • Ramsay Scale • Homerton’s own
  • 4. Self Reporting- Gold standard • Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) • Behavioural Pain Scale (BPS)
  • 5. Item Description Score Facial expression Relaxed 1 Partially tightened 2 Fully tightened 3 Grimacing 4 Upper limbs No movement 1 Partially bent 2 Fully bent with finger flexion 3 Permanently retracted 4 Compliance with ventilation Tolerating movement 1 Coughing but tolerating ventilation for most of the time 2 Fighting ventilator 3 Unable to control ventilation 4 Source: Ahlers et al. Critical Care 2008 12:R15 doi:10.1186/cc6789
  • 6. Anxiety • Fear, apprehension • Multi-factorial: inability to communicate, continuous lightingand stimulation, sleep deprivation, fight or flight.  Agitation • Physiological disturbance (Hypoxemia/tension/glycaemia, Biochemical, Pyrexia, Bacteraemia etc) • Multi-factorial: pain, withdrawal, delirium, adverse drug effects, extreme anxiety  Pain • ITU environment (Sleeplessness, tubes, lack of control and autonomy, lack of information, immobilisation, dressings etc) • Underlying Pathology • Trauma and surgical procedures (major and minor) • Cytokine Overload (TNF, IL-1/6/8 +++)  To allow ITU intervention and expedite care
  • 8.
  • 9.
  • 10. The time for the drug concentration to decrease a set percentage varies according to the duration of infusion • “Context-sensitive half-time” is the time taken for the plasma concentration to decrease by 50%, following an infusion, of a given duration. • A 50% reduction is necessary for recovery from most IV anesthetics
  • 11.
  • 12. Phenanthrene, Vd 3.5, T1/2 180 min  Pharmacologic effects of δ/μ/κ-receptor agonists  Analgesia, respiratory depression, GI effects, orthostatic hypotension, sedation and altered mentation  Metabolism • Glucuronide conjugation; active metabolite, morphine-6- glucoronide (5-10%) and renally eliminated • Prolonged effects in renal/hepatic failure  Adverse effects • Histamine release (allergic rxns, hypotension) • N&V, Pruritis
  • 13. Synthetic anilino-piperidine opoid-like agonist • Vd 4, T ½ β 350min • 100x more potent than morphine, μ agonist • Lipophilic 580x morphine: rapid (lipophilic)  CV stable • No histamine release, no hypotension • Bradycardia  Metabolism • No active metabolites, dealkylation to nor fentanyl-> hydroxylation -> Excreted renally • Clearance affected by age, obesity, plasma protein content, liver disease, renal insufficiency • 2+ compartment model pharmacokinetics, context sensitive T ½, both an α and β T ½, plasma 13 min, Terminal 350 min
  • 14. Anilo-piperidine analogue of fentanyl • 20x potency of morphine, μ agonis • Onset 90 seconds due to pKa • Vd 0.8, pKa 6.5, Plasma T ½ 13, terminal T ½ 90 min  Pharmacological effects • Hypotension, bradycardia and obtunds hypertensive response to laryngoscopy • Chest wall rigidity • Minimal histamine release  Metabolism • Hepatic N dealkylation to noralfentanil, inactive metabolite • Virtually no accumulation or prolonged terminal half life due to lower lipid solubility
  • 15. Synthetic anilino-piperidine opoid without methyl ester linkage • Potent μ agonist, 100x morphine • 50x relative lipid solubility to morphine, rapid onset/offset • Vd 0.35, T ½ 15 min  Similar effect to alfentanil  Metabolism • independent of hepatic and renal function • de-esterification by non specific plasma and tissue esterases to inactive metabolites
  • 16. Optimal analgesia to alleviate anxiety and distress  Need to improve weaning/extubation times  Time on ITU  Adverse Events  Sedative requirements  Ideal analgesic agent  Does not negate good ITU practice, sedation breaks etc. Simply an adjunct to best practice.
  • 17. Citation Breen D, Karabinis A, Malbrain M, Morais R, Albrecht S, Jarnvig I-L, Parkinson P, Kirkham AJT: Decreased time on mechanical ventilation when comparing analgesia-based sedation using remifen-tanil versus standard hypnotic-based sedation for up to 10 days in ICU patients: a randomised trial. [ISRCTN47583497]. Crit Care 2005, 9:R200-R210  Background Sedation and analgesia on the ITU is a complex balancing act. At all times trying to ensure optimal patient comfort in a group that have a variety of problems and organ dysfunction as well as often quite protracted length of stay. All of which in combination with the various drug interactions can alter the pharmacological effect of all our therapies. Remifentanil in some respects ticks most of the boxes of an ideal opioid, bar cost. Its use on the ITU seems to have a great deal of potential.
  • 18. Objective This study aimed to assess the efficacy and safety of a prolonged infusion of remifentanil in critically ill patients for up to 10 days in comparison with a standard sedative regime of midazolam plus a traditional opioid.  Design This study was a randomised, open-label, multicentre, parallel-group.  Setting 10 countries and 15 medical centres.  Subjects Patients requiring long-term mechanical ventilation for medical reasons. Post-op patients requiring extended mechanical ventilation as a result of post-surgical complications were also included. Patients were eligible if they were more than 18 years old, had been admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) within the previous 30 hours, were expected to require mechanical ventilation for longer than 96 hours and required analgesia and sedation.
  • 19. Exclusion Criteria • Pregnant females • Patients with condition preventing sedation assessment • If likely to require tracheostomy/surgery during treatment • If NMJ blocking agents required by infusion • Epidural analgesia • Anaesthetic agents beyond the specified • Sensitivity to any of the specified drugs • History of alcohol or drug abuse  Intervention • 105 patients were randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive either a remifentanil-based regime or a comparator hypnotic-based regime using midazolam with either morphine or fentanyl for analgesia.
  • 20. Study End points • The primary endpoint was the time from the start of study drug to extubation. Secondary endpoints were the time from start of study drug until start of weaning, the time from start of weaning until extubation, the time from start of study drug to ICU discharge. • The safety endpoints were the offset of pharmacodynamic effects of study drugs after permanent discontinuation, haemodynamic effects, clinical adverse events and the requirement for re-intubation. • Serious adverse events were defined as adverse events that resulted in any of the following outcomes: death, life-threatening event, prolongation of hospitalisation, or a disability or incapacity.  Statistics • The time to event endpoints were analysed with the generalised Wilcoxon test with a two-sided α level of 5% judged to indicate a statistically significant difference between the treatment groups.
  • 21. Characteristic Remifentanil Comparator Number of patients treated 57 48 Medical (%)/post-surgical (%) 49 (88)/7 (13) 44 (92)/4 (8) Emergency (%)/elective (%) 27 (84)/5 (16), n = 32 21 (91)/2 (9), n = 23 Age (years) 52.2 ± 18.4 57.3 ± 18.1 Male (%)/female (%) 39 (68)/18 (32) 32 (67)/16 (33) Height (cm) 171.2 ± 9.7 169.0 ± 7.9 Weight (kg) 78.6 ± 13.41 76.3 ± 15.50 SAPS II on admission 43.0 ± 15.6 43.3 ± 11.2 MAP (mmHg)a 88.8 ± 16.5 88.9 ± 14.8 Heart rate (b.p.m.)a 98.9 ± 20.1 95.9 ± 15.5 SAS scorea 3.3 ± 1.3 3.3 ± 1.4 PI scorea 2.0 ± 1.2 2.1 ± 1.1 aBaseline values. Where errors are given, results are means± SD. MAP, mean arterial pressure; PI, pain intensity; SAS, Sedation–Agitation Scale. Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210.
  • 22. Remifentanil (n = Characteristic 57) Comparator (n = 48) P Number (%) of patients 29 (51%) 16 (33%) extubated Time from start of study 83.0 98.0 0.523 drugs to weaning (h)  Difference (95% CI) -15.0 (-61.8 to 31.8) Time from start of study 94.0 147.5 0.033 drugs to extubation(h)  Difference (95% CI) -53.5 (-111.4 to 4.4) Time from weaning time 0.9 27.5 <0.001 until extubation (h)  Difference (95% CI) -26.6 (-40.8 to -12.4) Time from start of study drugs until ICU discharge 187.3 209.8 0.326 (h)  Difference (95% CI) -22.5 (-201.5 to 156.5) Point estimates are 75th centiles. CI, confidence interval. Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
  • 23. Kaplan–Meier survival plot of time to extubation (days) Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
  • 24. Median time to offset of effects as measured by the time to therapeutic intervention Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
  • 25. Mean total midazolam dose Source: Crit Care. 2005; 9(3): R200–R210
  • 26. Matching • The two treatment groups were well matched in terms of patient characteristics and baseline clinical assessments.  Efficacy • Fewer than 50% of patients were extubated during the 10-day treatment period (45 of 105). There was no difference in the time to the start of the weaning process. There was a statistical and clinically significant difference between the two groups in the study's primary endpoint of time of starting the drug to extubation. A Kaplan–Meier plot analysing the duration of mechanical ventilation, the time difference was 53.5 hours, being shorter in the remifentanil group (P = 0.033). The time from the start of the weaning process to extubation was also significantly different at 26.6 hours, also in favour of remifentanil (P < 0.001). • The median percentage time of optimal analgesia/sedation was comparable for both groups (remifentanil 96.9%, comparator 97.8%, median difference -0.3, 95% confidence interval -2.7 to 0.2; P = 0.16).  Safety • Comparable
  • 27. Exposure to Study drugs • Of the patients treated with remifentanil, 26% (15 of 57) did not receive any midazolam during the study. There was nearly a ninefold difference in mean total midazolam requirements in the fentanyl group compared with the remifentanil group, and a fourfold difference in the morphine group compared with the remifentanil group.
  • 28. Analgesia-based sedation with remifentanil was well tolerated; it reduces the duration of mechanical ventilation and improves the weaning process compared with standard hypnotic-based sedation regimes in ICU patients requiring long-term ventilation for up to 10 days.  Reminfentanil is sedative sparing and has a very rapid offset even after a 10-day infusion, with no evidence of accumulation.  The adverse event profile was similar in remifentanil-based and other hypnotic-based regimes.
  • 29. One particular concern was that the titration of remifentanil was based on a fixed protocol, but the titration of the comparator benzodiazepine infusion was not.  There was no statistical difference in the time from start of study drug to the beginning of the weaning process, however, this process was begun in the remifentanil group an average of 15 hours earlier.  The authors do mention that the sedation levels were matched in both groups, during treatment and in the post-treatment period, and that the differences were due to the drug per se and not the level of sedation. In an unblinded trial, if no reason for the delay is offered, the potential for bias is there.  Competing interest with funding from GSK to some of the centres involved.
  • 30. The technique of using remifentanil as the primary sedative and analgesic, with the addition of traditional sedatives such as propofol or midazolam only if necessary, has been studied in ICU patients for up to 3 days (1,2,3) and in neurosurgical patients studied for up to 5 days, with good results (4).  The end of Fentanyl infusions?  Clearly a rigorous double blinded RCT is needed.  Of particular interest is in the cost/benefit ratio of alfentanil vs remifentanil, as pharmacokinetically alfentanil and remifentanil demonstrate similar profiles.
  • 31. 1. Breen, D; Wilmer, A; Bodenham, A; Bach, V; Bonde, J; Kessler, P; Albrecht, S; Shaikh, S. Offset of pharmacodynamic effects and safety of remifentanil in intensive care unit patients with various degrees of renal impairment. Crit Care. 2004;8:R21–R30. doi: 10.1186/cc2399. 2. Muellejans, B; Lopez, A; Cross, MH; Bonome, C; Morrison, L; Kirkham, AJT. Remifentanil versus fentanyl for analgesia based sedation to provide patient comfort in the intensive care unit: a randomised control trial [ISRCTN43755713]. Crit Care. 2004;8:R1–R11. doi: 10.1186/cc2398 3. Dahaba, AA; Grabner, T; Rehak, PH; List, WF; Metzler, H. Remifentanil versus morphine analgesia and sedation for mechanically ventilated critically ill patients: a randomised double blind study. Anesthesiology. 2004;101:640–646. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200409000-00012 4. Karabinis, A; Mandragos, K; Stergiopoulos, S; Komnos, A; Soukup, J; Speelberg, B; Kirkham, AJT. Safety and efficacy of analgesia-based sedation using remifentanil versus standard hypnotic-based regimens in intensive care unit patients with brain injuries: a randomised, controlled trial [ISRCTN50308308]. Crit Care. 2004;8:R268–R280. doi: 10.1186/cc2896.